I'm inserting multiple rows into a DB, and joining them together in an attempt to improve performance. I get an ODBCException telling me my SQL syntax is wrong. But when I try it in the mysql commandline client, it works just fine.. I ran a simplified test to describe the process.
Command Line Client:
mysql> create table test (`id` int, `name` text);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec)
mysql> INSERT INTO test(id, name) VALUES ('1', 'Foo');INSERT INTO test(id, name) VALUES ('2', 'bar');
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec)
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.00 sec)
mysql>
After that I ran this code on the same DB:
comm.CommandText = "INSERT INTO test(id, name) VALUES ('1', 'Foo');INSERT INTO test(id, name) VALUES ('2', 'bar');";
comm.ExecuteNonQuery();
which gives me the following error:
+ base {"ERROR [42000] [MySQL][ODBC 5.1 Driver][mysqld-5.1.51-community]You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near 'INSERT INTO test(id, name) VALUES ('2', 'bar')' at line 1"} System.Data.Common.DbException {System.Data.Odbc.OdbcException}
Batching is actually supported by MySQL ODBC driver v5+, you just need to click on the Details button of the ODBC control panel (if on Windows) and check the "Allow multiple statements" checkbox.
Alternatively, uses OPTIONS=67108864 on you odbc connection string.
More information here : http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/connector-odbc-configuration-connection-parameters.html
Yes, ODBC does NOT support batch processing. (EDIT: See @Jean-Do's answer for a more up to date solution.)
But there is another option:
INSERT INTO test(id, name) VALUES ('1', 'Foo'), ('2', 'bar');
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